The reason it becomes a big deal can be twofold. One was already stated, that a market, however small might exist. Such markets affect hardware and software manufacturers. It's possible that some form of support is included as well.

It also probably means that they made a point of testing all hardware with BSD.

That being said, the price is too high, so I'm not sure what their target will be.

i believe workstations are certified for certain specific applications and that partly accounts for the price premium. ofcourse, the hardware costs more too for example ECC memory costs more.

i think ix systems are counting on dedicated BSD users to buy the systems who want a quality system that has BSD supported hardware and don't mind the price.
but are there any commercial workstation apps that run on BSD?

Right, but the applications that are certified are usually things like AutoCAD or one of the solids modelling programs. You don't really have that on BSD, but there are other compatibility issues to deal with.

As far as I could tell, the computer is a basic consumer PC -- no ECC-Reg memory, no RAID controller, no server-quality drives, and so forth. It does seem very costly for what it is.

To me a workstation is really just a 'work' station, for me that means my laptop. While she ain't super fast I do most of my work there and it's BSD powered.

I do agree though if your going to pay high prices for some kind of dedicated system it may as well be made worth while. If I had to fork over a few grand for any thing someone might call a workstation in the traditional sense. It probably would be needed for working harder at processing then me at whatever is being done!

Didn't a major part of the work station business go under from the falling prices and increasing performance of crappy consumer PCs?

Truly, as a VAR, I could build a more powerful box in the $500 range, with compatible *BSD hardware and still make a small profit. Pricing is way off base on this one, and I would never limit myself to such a small market and then price myself right out if it.

No, not really. They use server-like boards, with ECC-Reg memory, often with more than one (good!) Ethernet port, have SAS options, and can handle huge amounts of memory. The S5397 I mentioned can take 128GB memory, for example. They have dual CPUs as a rule, and usually are huge (E-ATX form factors).

No, not really. They use server-like boards, with ECC-Reg memory, often with more than one (good!) Ethernet port, have SAS options, and can handle huge amounts of memory. The S5397 I mentioned can take 128GB memory, for example. They have dual CPUs as a rule, and usually are huge (E-ATX form factors).

More reliable and expandable. They use better-quality parts as a rule, and the error-checking memory makes a big difference, particularly when you have very large amounts of memory. You don't want the bridge to fail because you had a flipped bit in memory that propogated through the rest of your calculation.

They also tend to use cards like nVidia's Quadros, which have specially-written drivers for things like AutoCAD and so forth. You can of course get these for "regular" PCs as well, but they are terribly expensive and they don't play games that well. So people don't buy them unless they use traditional engineering (like CAD/CAM/FEM) applications.

This is some strange offer, especially the dual-boot option with PC-BSD/Windows. If we buy some workstation, it's something 'special' without the usual customer hardware, something you can really use 24h with high load.

It's tempting to ask them why it's so high priced. I wonder if it's been discussed and perhaps even answered on the PCBSD forums?

(Goes to take a very quick look.)

Nope nothing under ixsystems high prices.

It's peculiar and one does wonder why are they charging so much, especially with no explanation? One assumes they're not completely ignorant, and even fi they were, there is usually some logic behind these things.

EDIT. I just had a horrible thought--what if the PCBSD users have become like Apple users? We'll buy anything with your name on it?

Sigh, of course, this Sunday, I have to go with my wife to look at Apple computers--I wouldn't trust her on a PC and I don't have the energy to support BSD or Linux for her.

I too wonder why this priced so high. I been following ixSystem for a long while, before they were called that. I have huge respect for Matt Olander and I even considered buying one of there servers before I ended up getting my current Workstation.

I've bought Workstation for years. This seems nothing more than a PC to me. My Workstation contains Dual AMD Opteron Processor can support upto 32GB or RAM. Has Dual SCSI u320, Dual SATA2 and IDE. It can hold 12 hard drives and has 6 external 5.25" drive bays for CDs, DVDs or what have you. It also has redundant power supplies so given that is what I expect to see in a Workstation, I'm disapointed by this.

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